In 2026, letting a commercial property in England and Wales is no longer just about finding tenants — it is about legal energy efficiency compliance.
Under the government’s Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards (MEES), landlords must ensure their building meets a minimum Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating before it can legally be leased.

Failing to comply can lead to substantial financial penalties and an unlawful lease — even if tenants are already occupying the property.

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1. The Legal Rule: Minimum EPC Rating Required

To legally let commercial property, your building must have:

EPC rating E or above

If your property is rated F or G, you cannot:

  • Grant a new lease

  • Renew a lease

  • Continue letting the property

This applies to:

  • Shops

  • Offices

  • Industrial units

  • Restaurants

  • Warehouses

  • Mixed-use buildings

If the property fails, it becomes a sub-standard commercial property in legal terms.


2. When You Need a Commercial EPC

You must obtain a valid EPC before:

SituationEPC Required
Selling the buildingYes
New leaseYes
Lease renewalYes
Marketing the propertyYes
Tenant assignmentUsually yes
Lease extensionYes

Important: The EPC must be available to prospective tenants before viewing or advertising.

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3. Step-by-Step Compliance Checklist

Step 1 — Check if Your EPC Is Still Valid

  • EPCs last 10 years

  • If expired → you must obtain a new assessment

  • Old ratings often fail 2026 standards

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Step 2 — Review Your Rating

RatingLegal Status 2026
A–DFully compliant
ELegal but future risk
F–GIllegal to let

Step 3 — Improve the Property (If Needed)

Common upgrades landlords must carry out:

  • LED lighting installation

  • Insulation improvements

  • Heating system upgrades

  • Smart heating controls

  • Double glazing

  • Efficient HVAC systems

After improvements → new EPC assessment required


Step 4 — Register Exemption (Only If Eligible)

You may register an exemption if:

  • Improvements cost more than allowed payback

  • Building is listed

  • Tenant refuses consent

  • Devaluation risk exists

Exemptions last 5 years and must be registered — they are not automatic.

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Step 5 — Keep Documentation

You must retain:

  • EPC certificate

  • Recommendation report

  • Improvement invoices

  • Exemption proof (if applicable)

Local authorities can request these at any time.


4. Penalties for Non-Compliance

Letting a non-compliant commercial property can result in:

Breach DurationFine
Less than 3 monthsUp to £50,000
More than 3 monthsUp to £150,000
Publication penaltyPublic naming

Tenants can also challenge leases and renegotiate terms.


5. Why Compliance Matters for Landlords

Beyond legal requirements, EPC ratings now affect:

  • Rental value

  • Tenant demand

  • Mortgage approval

  • Investment saleability

  • Insurance risk

  • Future regulations

Buildings rated D or higher rent faster and retain value longer.


6. Future Regulations After 2026

The UK government is moving toward stricter targets:

Expected future requirement: Minimum rating C for commercial buildings

Upgrading early prevents expensive retrofits later.


Final Thoughts

In 2026, EPC compliance determines whether your commercial property can legally generate income.

✔ Check your rating
✔ Upgrade early
✔ Keep documentation
✔ Provide EPC before marketing

A compliant EPC is now a core legal responsibility for every commercial landlord.

EPCRate London
 


Written by Jino Jose

DEA & NDEA Accredited Energy Assessor  ·  EPCRATE, London  ·  Founded 2015

Jino Jose is the founder of EPCRATE and one of the few London assessors holding both Domestic Energy Assessor (DEA) and Non-Domestic Energy Assessor (NDEA) accreditations. He has carried out thousands of EPC assessments across all 32 London boroughs since 2015.

✓ DEA Accredited ✓ NDEA Accredited ⭐ Trustpilot 5.0

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